That distinction matters because a speed win on one problem does not automatically mean the same device can run all quantum algorithms at the scale needed to break modern public-key systems.
Willow’s public figures show a device built for experimental advantage. Public commentary notes Willow’s qubit count and the specialized nature of the algorithm.
By contrast, breaking a widely used signature scheme would likely need millions of logical qubits and robust error correction — a threshold that current machines do not meet.
The practical takeaway is simple: this is a clear step forward in quantum research, but not a sudden collapse of existing crypto security.
That work gives a path to protect systems before a cryptographic break becomes practical. Still, many voices call for faster testing and deployment of hybrid schemes that combine current signatures with quantum-resistant alternatives.
But coins tied to reused or revealed public keys would be the weaker link once an adversary had the right quantum tools. Wallet providers, custodians, and node developers are watching these developments and weighing migration plans.
Featured image from ICOBench, chart from TradingView